Barbie Digital Camera With Lcd Display

Vivitar S126 16MP 4x Zoom Compact Digital Camera - Purple.We've had a problem with the link you've just selected. To start shopping, please visit the homepage by clicking on the link below. Go to the homepage The S126 features a 16 MP sensor for capturing high-resolution digital images which can be played back on its 1.8" LCD display. The 4x digital zoom lens allows you to get closer to your subject and a built-in automatic flash is included for use in low-light. Lightweight, ultra compact and easy to take anywhere. This camera's 4x digital zoom lens allows you to get closer to your subject. Tools such as face detection and a self-timer help make taking portraits, self-portraits, and group shots easy, while the menu simplifies navigating the camera's controls and finding images after they are saved to an SD-type memory card. Continuous shooting up to 3 frames per second. Features:720p high definition video capture and playback with sound. Memory card compatability: SD, SDHC, SDXC, mMC, compact flash.

General information:Size H5.5, W9.5cm. Weight 100g. Depth 2.5cm (when switched off). Batteries required: 3 x AAA (not included). Includes USB cable, carry strap, . Tell us where you are or sign in Prices correct as displayed but are subject to change Be first to ask a question Currently out of stock for deliveryReserve for store pickup - FreeWhy risk a wasted trip? Reserve it now, pay in store when you collect. Buy Now Pay Later, every time you use an Argos Card Use your existing Argos Card or apply for a new one at the payment page. Buy Now, Pay Later : Pay off a "Buy Now, Pay Later" Plan by the end date and you pay no interest. If you don't pay in full by the end date or keep your account up to date, you'll be charged interest on the daily balance from the date of purchase. However, if you choose to make payments without clearing the balance, the earlier you pay the less interest you'll be charged. Or pay monthly with our Fixed Payment Plan. Representative Example: Cash price £450, 36 monthly payments of £18.25, at a fixed interest rate of 29.9%, total amount of credit and total amount repayable £656.91.Representative 29.9% APR .

The APR relates to the Argos Card as a whole and is variable. The interest rate for the Fixed Payment Plan will be fixed Interest Free Credit may be available. Representative Example: Cash price £480, 12 monthly payments of £40.00, interest rate is 0%, total amount of credit and total amount repayable £480. Representative 29.9% APR variable The above are just examples. The monthly payment, term and total amount will differ depending on the cash price.
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Would you like to give feedback on images or tell us about a lower price?Generation after generation, Monopoly money stacked up in piles of pink, green and gold, Hot Wheels raced across floors and Barbie was, well, just a doll.Classic toys are becoming much less classic because of upgrades meant to entertain technology-obsessed children. Where they once tried, unsuccessfully, to compete with digital devices, toy makers are co-opting them.Monopoly money can now be counted by a tablet computer. Hot Wheels cars can zoom across iPad screens. She’s become a digital camera.“We know that kids are going to play with technology, with iPhones and iPads and Android devices,” said Chuck Scothon, senior vice president for marketing for Mattel’s North America division. “Our job is to not necessarily avoid that, but if you can’t fix it, feature it.” The souped-up classics reflect the growing reality that children, like their parents, are loath to spend time without their devices. More than a third of children 8 years old and younger use mobile devices like iPads or smartphones, a recent study from Common Sense Media found, and about a quarter of children ages 5 to 8 multitask with their digital devices most or some of the time.

While toy makers have tried to modernize their products for years, this is the industry’s most aggressive integration of tech. The upgrades are also a direct response to the toy industry’s funk. Retailers are desperate for something new, and most toy makers had a disappointing 2011. In the fourth quarter, when toy companies make most of their sales for the year, sales at the two biggest companies, Hasbro and Mattel, fell by 2 percent domestically (Hasbro’s figures include Canadian revenue).And the main item retailers could not seem to keep in stock last year was a tablet computer for children, the LeapFrog LeapPad Explorer.“Kids like to play with the gadgets that they see their parents using, so I think it makes sense for toy makers to find a way to freshen up,” said John Alteio, director of toys and games for Amazon, which will carry several of the tech-enhanced toys.Mr. Scothon said Mattel has studied how children spend time on various activities, including digital devices

, and found that a lot of playtime was revolving around the gadgets.So Mattel’s new Barbie has a lens in her back; children point the doll at an image, and press a button on Barbie’s belt to take a photo. The image then appears on the front of Barbie’s T-shirt. The photos can also be downloaded to a computer.“The future of play is trending towards a seamless integration between a physical toy and digital add-ons,” said Laura Phillips, senior vice president for toys and seasonal merchandise at Walmart, in an e-mail. “This innovation is extremely important to keeping kids engaged and keeping toys more relevant.” Toys like spy glasses and laser tag sets have been transformed. Now, because of the addition of technology that records daytime and night vision video, the spy glasses made by Jakks Pacific, called Spy Net Multi Vision Goggles, could actually perform serious surveillance. And Hasbro’s Laser Tag of yore, when children ran around and pointed toy guns at one another, has been replaced by children pointing iPhones instead.

Players place the iPhone in a gun, and the iPhone display — via an app — shows live video of whatever is ahead overlaid with graphics. When the trigger is pulled, lasers appear. Mattel is introducing a line of games called Apptivity for classic brands, including Hot Wheels, Fisher-Price and Barbie. Using free apps, children pull up a game on the iPad. But instead of using a virtual car or avatar, children move small plastic toys with sensors around the iPad.The makeovers have extended to tech versions of board games, too. In Game of Life, the plastic spinner has been replaced by a tablet, which shows a picture of the spinner and makes the spinner’s sound. In Monopoly, a tablet or smartphone counts everyone’s money and, when a player lands on Chance or Community Chest, it starts a short digital game, replacing the cards that told people to go to jail, go directly to jail.“While parents might want certain things, kids enjoy their mobile devices,” said Hasbro’s chief marketing officer, John Frascotti.

“This allows parents not to have that confrontation with kids.”Gadgets that make the link between the virtual and the actual world can be helpful to children, said Sandra L. Calvert, director of the Children’s Digital Media Center at Georgetown. Though children need time away from devices, “any kind of link that you can be drawing between different environments, and seeing that they’re somehow linked together, is useful,” she said.However, given that the digitally linked games are more expensive (the Barbie with a camera, for instance, is $50, more than twice as much as a plain Barbie) and that many require expensive iPads or smartphones to work, analysts say their potential is limited.“IPhones and iPads, while extremely popular, are still very limited in real numbers — they’re expensive, they’re adult products, and yes, kids take them and use them, but you have to ask yourself just how far they will go,” Lutz Muller, a toy analyst for Klosters Trading, said. The Common Sense study found that low-income families were unlikely to have downloaded apps for their children’s toys, for instance, which many of the new toys require.